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The White House on Saturday marked the one-year anniversary of President Donald Trump’s National Energy Dominance Council by drawing a sharp contrast with the Biden-era, including Interior Secretary Doug Burgum citing higher production and lower gas prices as proof of ‘real savings’ for Americans.

‘Under the President’s leadership and through the Council’s relentless execution, we have delivered historic gains in energy production, affordability, and security,’ Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, chair of the National Energy Dominance Council, told Fox News Digital. 

‘Gasoline prices have fallen to some of the lowest levels in years, permitting has been streamlined, and American energy exports are surging,’ he added. ‘These achievements are not abstract, they mean real savings for families, farmers, and small businesses, and they are strengthening our position on the world stage.’ 

Trump signed an executive order creating the National Energy Dominance Council on Feb. 14, 2025, which was tasked with cutting red tape and coordinating agencies to boost U.S. energy production, speed up permitting approvals, expand exports and deliver a national ‘energy dominance’ strategy. 

A year later, the administration pointed to a series of metrics showing the U.S. has accelerated past Biden-era data on production — while driving down energy costs that ripple through household budgets, from gas and heating to shipping and groceries.

U.S. crude oil production, for example, reached a record 13.6 million barrels per day in 2025, with the White House calling it the highest output of any country in the world. In comparison, the Biden administration took four years for production to climb from 11.3 million to 13.2 million barrels per day, a figure ‘Trump blew past in months,’ according to the White House. 

On the natural gas production front, the administration said the U.S. produced 110.1 billion cubic feet per day in November 2025, the highest level recorded since federal tracking began in 1973. All in, production is about 8% above the Biden-era average, and 4% above the previous record for U.S. natural gas production, according to the data. 

While the U.S. has also widened its lead as the world’s top liquefied natural gas (LNG) exporter, with average LNG exports rising to 15 billion cubic feet per day in 2025, up from 11 under the Biden administration. 

‘As we mark this anniversary, we reaffirm our commitment to advancing American Energy Dominance and ensuring that our nation’s energy abundance continues to power prosperity, security, and freedom for generations to come,’ Burgum added in a comment to Fox News Digital. 

Lowering prices through an expanded energy grid was crucial to the executive order establishing the council itself, calling for ‘reliable and affordable energy production to drive down inflation, grow our economy, create good-paying jobs.’

Energy has emerged as a key piece of the administration’s puzzle of addressing affordability concerns stemming from the Biden era when inflation hit a 40-year-high, as cheaper energy typically ripples through the economy by cutting transportation and shipping costs and lowering the power bills factories pay to make everything from groceries to building materials. 

The White House cast cheaper gas as a kitchen-table win this year, touting pump prices are about $2.90 a gallon, which is 16% below the Biden-era average and a roughly 42% drop from the $5.02 peak in June 2022.  The administration celebrated that affordable energy benefits Americans from working families and rural communities, to small businesses and farmers who typically frequently drive farther for gas or those on a budget. 

Crude oil prices have fallen by roughly 18% in 2025, dropping to $65 a barrel from the $79 Biden-era average, according to the data. 

Environmental groups have meanwhile slammed Trump’s ‘energy dominance’ push as a fossil-fuel expansion that undercuts climate goals and could increase pollution and impacts on public lands and communities. 

‘One year ago, President Donald J. Trump launched the National Energy Dominance Council to restore America’s Energy Dominance and make life more affordable for hardworking families. Today, the results speak for themselves,’ Burgum said of the data. 

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Senate Republicans gained a key ally in their quest to enshrine voter ID into law, but the lawmaker’s support comes with a condition.

A trio of lawmakers, led by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, have undertaken a campaign to convince their colleagues to support the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act, working social media and closed-door meetings to secure the votes.

The campaign has proven successful, with the cohort gaining a crucial vote from Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, who announced that she would back the SAVE America Act, which recently passed the House. With Collins, Senate Republicans have at least a slim majority backing the act.

‘I support the version of the SAVE America Act that recently passed the House,’ Collins said in a statement first reported by the Maine Wire. ‘The law is clear that in this country only American citizens are eligible to vote in federal elections.’

‘In addition, having people provide an ID at the polls, just as they have to do before boarding an airplane, checking into a hotel, or buying an alcoholic beverage, is a simple reform that will improve the security of our federal elections and will help give people more confidence in the results,’ she continued.

Collins noted that she did not support the previous version of the bill, known simply as the SAVE Act, because it ‘would have required people to prove their citizenship every single time they cast a ballot.’

Her decision gives Lee and Senate Republicans the votes needed to clear a key procedural hurdle in the Senate.

‘We now have enough votes to pass a motion to proceed to the House-passed bill — even without any additional votes — with Vice President JD Vance breaking the tie,’ Lee said in a post on X.

That tie-breaking scenario would only present itself if Republicans turn to the standing, or talking, filibuster. It’s a move that Lee has been pushing his colleagues to make, and one that would require actual, physical debate over the bill. 

It’s the precursor to the current version of the filibuster, where the only hill lawmakers have to climb is acquiring 60 votes. Lee and other conservatives believe that if they turn to the standing filibuster, rather than the ‘zombie filibuster,’ they can barrel through Democratic resistance.

But some fear that turning to that tool could paralyze the Senate floor for weeks or even months, depending on Senate Democrats’ resolve.  

And Collins’ support is not enough to smash through the 60-vote Senate filibuster.

Complicating matters, Collins made clear that she does not support doing away with the filibuster, as do several other Senate Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., who reiterated earlier this week that the GOP doesn’t have the votes to eliminate the legislative tool.

‘I oppose eliminating the legislative filibuster,’ Collins said. ‘The filibuster is an important protection for the rights of the minority party that requires Senators to work together in the best interest of the country.’

‘Removing that protection would, for example, allow a future Congress controlled by Democrats to pass provisions on anything they want — D.C. statehood, open borders, or packing the Supreme Court — with just a simple majority of Senators,’ she continued.

GOP senators Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, and Lisa Murkowski, of Alaska, remain the only Republicans who have not pledged support for the SAVE Act.

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The head of the Justice Department’s antitrust unit said Thursday she is leaving the role, effective immediately, at a critical moment for corporate mergers in America.

Gail Slater, the assistant attorney general in charge of the Antitrust Division, wrote on X: ‘It is with great sadness and abiding hope that I leave my role as AAG for Antitrust today.’

Slater continued, ‘It was indeed the honor of a lifetime to serve in this role. Huge thanks to all who supported me this past year, most especially the men and women of’ the Department.

The White House referred questions to the Justice Department.

Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement, “On behalf of the Department of Justice, we thank Gail Slater for her service to the Antitrust Division which works to protect consumers, promote affordability, and expand economic opportunity.”

Slater is leaving just as media giants Netflix and Paramount Skydance battle for control of Warner Bros. Discovery.

President Donald Trump had said he was going to get involved in reviewing whichever Warner Bros. deal proceeds, an uncommon occurrence in antitrust matters.

But in an interview with NBC News, Trump slightly changed his tune. ‘I’ve been called by both sides, it’s the two sides, but I’ve decided I shouldn’t be involved,’ he said.

‘The Justice Department will handle it.’

Trump has met with executives from both of Warner Bros.’ bidders.

The Justice Department will also head to court in weeks in a bid to challenge concert venue manager Live Nation’s ownership of Ticketmaster.

Shares of Live Nation jumped as much as 5.8% after Slater announced her departure. By 1 p.m. ET, the rally had abated to around 2.5%.

When the Senate confirmed Slater, 78 senators from both sides of the aisle voted in her favor. Only 19 opposed her confirmation.

This week, her deputy in the Antitrust Division also departed.

Mark Hamer, deputy assistant attorney general for the Antitrust Division, wrote on LinkedIn, ‘Decided the time is right for me to return to private practice.’ He praised Slater as a ‘leader of exceptional wisdom, strength and integrity.’

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  • Lucas Pinheiro Braathen won the first-ever Winter Olympics medal for a South American country.
  • Born in Norway to a Brazilian mother, the skier now represents Brazil after a dispute with the Norwegian Ski Federation.
  • Braathen briefly retired from skiing at age 23 to pursue other interests like modeling and being a DJ.
  • He won the men’s giant slalom gold medal, finishing ahead of Swiss skiers Marco Odermatt and Loic Meillard.

BORMIO, Italy — Other skiers will tell you that Lucas Pinheiro Braathen is really a Norwegian athlete to them, since he trained in that system to become of the world’s best alpine skiers.

Pinheiro Braathen, on the other hand, wants you to know how he was a soccer player first. He tells you about visiting family in Brazil when he was little and becoming so entranced by one-named Brazilian soccer megastars that he even informed his father around age 6 that he wanted to become the world’s best on the pitch.

“Somehow, I’m a skier now,” said Pinheiro Braathen, looking down at a freshly awarded Olympic gold medal in his hand. “But at least I’m a champ.”

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This brief contradiction – with a men’s giant slalom gold-medalist from Norway talking about soccer with a Brazilian flag tied around him – represents the nature of this 25-year-old’s complicated journey to reach a historic moment in Olympic history.

The medal around his neck is the first ever awarded to a South American country during the Winter Olympics. Pinheiro Braathen’s mother is Brazilian, but he was born in Oslo and grew up in Norway.

It is important to Pinheiro Braathen, though, that he isn’t just a skier.

He’s a celebrity. He’s a model. He’s a DJ. He’s also a world-class skier, of course, but those other pursuits prompted him to announce his shock retirement from skiing at age 23. He’d been representing Norway. Before long, he was back in the sport and competing for Brazil.

“Daring to trust one’s self is something that is very universal,” Pinheiro Braathen said. “It’s very difficult, and it only gets more difficult with every day that passes, with social media and constant exposure to other peoples’ live sand perspectives and opinions. If it’s anything I hope that I can be the source of inspiration of today: You have to be who you are.”

Pinheiro Braathen’s initial retirement from skiing “came after weeks of rumored disputes with the Norwegian Ski Federation regarding image rights,” per Olympics.com.

“For him, that was super important,” said Norway’s Alte Lie McGarth, a childhood friend of Pinheiro Braathen who finished fifth in the giant slalom in Bormio. “He needed to have the space to do exactly what he needed. He wants to do a bunch of stuff outside of skiing, and now he has the space to be who he wants to be. I’m just proud of him for taking the choice.”

Despite the novelty of Brazil winning a medal in Alpine skiing, Pinheiro Braathen’s victory wasn’t some huge upset. He’s considered one of the world’s best slalom racers. In November, Pinheiro Braathen won a World Cup race in Finland, a first for Brazil, and he arrived at these Olympics No. 2 in the World Cup rankings for slalom and giant slalom.

Blessed with the leadoff spot for the first run in Bormio on Feb. 14, he threw down a 1:13.92 in the morning to open the event. Odermatt was the only competitor to get within 1.57 seconds of that time, and even he was nearly a second (0.95) behind Pinheiro Braathen.

“Conditions are always a factor. He got a clean course, and he took advantage of it,” said River Radamus, the United States’ top finisher at 17th. “That’s part of the game. But he didn’t make any mistakes.”

The gold medal was clearly Pinheiro Braathen’s to lose in the afternoon’s second run, and he didn’t lose it, posting a 2:25 total – when added to his first time – that was still 0.58 seconds ahead of silver-medalist Marco Odermatt of Switzerland. Another Swiss skier, Loic Meillard, took the bronze.

After Pinheiro Braathen’s second run, the Swiss tandem celebrated with him on the course, and that continued until after the medal ceremony.

“It’s funny to sit here today at this moment,” Pinheiro Braathen said, “because I cannot tell you how many comments I’ve read through from the day I started representing Brazil until becoming an Olympic champion today that have been along the lines of, ‘I have no idea what’s going on, but let’s go Brazil! Let’s go Lucas!

“I think it’s that unconditional love and support from the Brazilians, even though we’re still in the journey of introducing ski racing to Brazil, that I really brough with me today and allowed me to ski as fast as I did.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — If it takes the young upstarts of the NBA, the eventual stars-to-be, to reinvigorate the NBA All-Star break, then we owe them considerable gratitude.

The NBA’s Rising Stars set the tone Friday, Feb. 13 in an engaging and entertaining showcase that culminated with a stellar performance from Philadelphia 76ers rookie VJ Edgecombe to carry Team Vince — as in Vince Carter — to the Rising Stars championship. And as the NBA All-Star Game has faced widespread criticism for its lack of competitive spirit, let’s hope that the league’s biggest stars draw inspiration from its “Rising” ones.

In the semifinal round, Edgecombe scored his team’s final 10 points to win and carried Team Vince with 23 combined points across both games, including a pair of clutch, game-winning free throws in the championship.

“I appreciate people tuning in, even to the Rising Stars game,” Edgecombe told reporters after the game. “We just tried to make it fun, make it competitive, where it’s worth your time.”

Edgecombe wasn’t alone. On the whole, the entire crop of 28 first- and second-year players who participated Friday in the Rising Stars Game established a baseline spirit of competition that has been painfully absent from the supposed gem of the weekend, the actual All-Star Game.

Did the Rising Stars unleash relentless, playoff-level competition? No, of course not. They didn’t need to. What matters here is that they didn’t do the bare minimum. They didn’t sleepwalk and loaf through the exhibition in a way that insults fans investing their time and capital in the experience.

This is what’s crucial for the survival of the NBA All-Star Game, and the All-Star games of all the major domestic sports leagues, if we’re being honest. There’s a way to strike a balance of elevated competition without compromising safety or risking injury.

This was what the four coaches of the Rising Stars — Carter, Carmelo Anthony, Tracy McGrady and Austin Rivers — preached to their players.

“(The message) was compete hard but be smart,” Rockets guard Reef Sheppard, who played for Team Melo, told reporters. “This All-Star Weekend is supposed to be fun. At the same time, don’t go out there and just run around. Compete and play, but be smart and have fun.”

Said second-year Bulls forward Matas Buzelis, another emerging NBA star and one who combined to score 10 points across the two mini-games for Team Vince: “We weren’t trying to just lay back and cruise.”

The only shame Friday night was that, understandably, NBC prioritized its Olympic coverage for its primetime national broadcast and was forced to relegate the Rising Stars showcase to streaming-only broadcast Peacock, meaning a chunk of fans missed the showcase.

Several players said they noticed the handful of NBA All-Stars who spent their Friday night in the cosmopolitan city of Los Angeles court-side at the Intuit Dome, taking in the Rising Stars competition.

Donovan Mitchell of the Cavaliers, Scottie Barnes of the Raptors, De’Aaron Fox of the Spurs and Tyrese Maxey of the 76ers were all in attendance. All were shown on the jumbotron to applause from the fans in attendance.

It was this last player who, in part, inspired Edgecombe.

“Tyrese is my dog, man,” Edgecombe said. “I was like, he ain’t coming to watch if I ain’t going to play hard. So I was like, I’m going to play hard so at least it’s not a waste of his time.

“I know he has a whole lot of stuff he could probably be doing right now, especially being an All-Star. Tyrese is my dog. I love him.”

Here’s to hoping Maxey and his fellow All-Stars take after these young players to give fans the showcase they deserve.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

MILAN — Ilia Malinin finished his long program in tears, not triumph. In the most shockingly devastating performance by a favorite in Olympic figure skating history, the skater who was expected to win the gold medal in the men’s figure skating competition finished eighth.

Yes, eighth.

The Quad God was eighth. 

If anyone ever wondered just how intense Olympic pressure is, well, now we know. Malinin, 21, came into the men’s final with a solid five-point lead. He looked invincible. Then the other skaters closest to him started making all kinds of mistakes, not skating well. What a gift this was for Malinin. All he had to do was land a few of his patented quadruple jumps and the Olympic gold medal was his. 

But he couldn’t do it. Early in the long program, he popped his quad axel into thin air, then doubled a quad loop and fell on other jumps not once but twice. 

‘The pressure of the Olympics really gets you,” Malinin said afterward, answering every question calmly and completely. “The pressure is unreal. It’s almost like I wasn’t aware of where I was in the program. Usually I have more time and more feeling of how it is, but this time, it all went by so fast, and I really didn’t have time to make those changes or make that process different.”

The skater most in control of the sport the past four years was lost on the ice.

‘Coming into the free program, I was really confident,” he said, “just really feeling good about it, and then it’s like it’s right there, and it just left your hands.’

Malinin was so loose going into the final group of skaters for the long program that he teasingly faked doing a backflip as he walked out for his warmup, shaking a finger to the audience as if to say, not yet. Who does that as they march out for the most nerve-wracking moment of their lives? No one, except Malinin. 

But then he had a long wait through the five other skaters right behind him in the standings, 40 minutes in all. Something happened when he came out for his long program. His face looked tense. His bravado was gone. He looked worried, nervous. 

When the mistakes started happening, he couldn’t stop them. 

‘My life has been through a lot of ups and downs, and just before getting into my starting pose, I just felt all of those experiences, memories, thoughts really just rush in, and it just felt so overwhelming. I didn’t really know how to handle it in that moment,” he said.

Delightfully brash, but always with an impish smile, Malinin had been preparing for this moment for quite a few years, winning the last four U.S. titles and last two world championships. He hadn’t lost a competition since 2023. He had welcomed and even embraced the pressure building along the way. It had all been part of his dream.

Until that dream turned into a nightmare.

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CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy – Growing up in Park City, Utah, home of several sports for the 2002 Winter Olympics, Ashley Farquharson was surprised to learn not everyone in America knew what luge was.

Not every child grows up lying flat on their backs and sliding down an ice track feet first under six Gs of pressure?

As she’s gotten older, Farquharson has realized her experience was the unique one. With access to the same venues used in 2002 and after school programs like the Youth Sports Alliance (YSA), 41 Park City athletes are competing in the 2026 Winter Olympics. Farquharson, 26, said she’s part of the first generation to benefit from 2002’s legacy.

Looking ahead to 2034, when the Olympics return to Utah, Farquharson is passionate about making winter sports more accessible. Team USA’s third women’s luge medalist could be anywhere right now. So, what does increasing accessibility to winter sports look like?

“It looks like dismantling systems that have monetized it for their own personal gain,” Farquharson told USA TODAY. “Not only is it becoming inaccessible because of climate change and because of capitalism, but also because kids are being forced to specialize so early. So there’s a lot of components that go into it, but I want youth to know that if they want to pursue a sport, it will be possible for them, and it should be fun for them.”

A 2015 study out of Harvard defines sport specialization as “year-round training (greater than 8 months per year), choosing a single main sport, and/or quitting all other sports to focus on 1 sport.” The same study found that specialized training in young athletes leads to increased risk of injury and burnout. 

A 2020 study in the Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine found highly specialized athletes had 1.72 times greater odds of injury. Johns Hopkins Medicine reported that an estimated 70% of young athletes quit organized sports by age 13, and athletes who specialize at a young age are at risk of mental health problems like depression, stress, anxiety, unhealthy perfectionism and associating winning with self-worth. The American Academy of Pediatrics’ recommends delaying specialization until late adolescence, or 15-16 years old.

That’s about the age Farquharson decided to take luge more seriously, leaving behind a promising softball career in favor of Olympic pursuits. “I did love softball,” she said. “I do miss it still.”

Coaches told her she could’ve earned a college scholarship, but her family reminded her she could go to college whenever. She’s currently pursuing a business degree from Purdue.

“Don’t let the idea that you have to go to college right now hold you back from something potentially greater,” they said.

Farquharson wants athletes to know specializing any earlier than 15-16 would risk damaging their bodies before they have a chance to grow into them.

“When you’re a kid, you’re still developing every possible form of athleticism, right? It’s not like you need to have super fast sprints when you’re 7. You don’t even have legs yet!

“So I guess I would just say that it’s OK to not be good at something and still enjoy it. It’s OK not to be good at something and still want to pursue it. And it’s OK to do more than one thing.”

Skeleton Olympian Mystique Ro broke it down in aGoFundMepost last month.

Each season, she wrote, costs “well over $25,000.” Logistics – such as flights, rental cars, lodging – around $12,000; Training – gym fees, sliding fees and race fees – around $6,000; Nutrition – supplements and food – around $5,000-$7,000; and equipment, more than $11,000. 

“There are pieces of our sled (runners) that cost $700-1,000 per set,” she added. “One training run down the track costs, on average, 45 euro/trip.” As the top-ranked U.S. skeleton athlete regardless of gender, Ro posted on TikTok in July that she received a team-high stipend of $2,250 per month, or $27,000 per year.

Then there’s climate change. A 2024 study published in Current Issues in Tourism found that of 93 past and potential Winter Olympics and Paralympic host cities, only 52 would be reliable for the Games. Even if countries live up to their policies and pledges, which isn’t guaranteed. 

All the more reason Utah’s existing infrastructure is crucial for Team USA’s Winter Olympic pipeline. The same way NCAA sports are touted as a feeder system for the Summer Games, YSA’s Get Out & Play and ACTiV8 programs give children in Park City the opportunity to try winter sports. More than 3,200 children participate annually, up from 800 when YSA first began after the 2002 Games.

Seven athletes competing in 2026 participated in YSA’s Get Out & Play program or received direct funding from the alliance. Another 17 came up through YSA-affiliated clubs.

Farquharson has been sliding since age 11, having enrolled in YSA while attending Ecker Hill Middle School. Now she’s part of the White Castle USA Luge Slider Search, the program’s largest national recruiting effort established in 1985 to extend luge’s reach. Athletes age 10-13 are targeted and taught positioning, steering and stopping on wheeled sleds at stops around the country. 

Those who show the most promise are invited to Lake Placid, New York; Muskegon, Michigan; or Park City for an opportunity to slide on ice and be selected to the next year’s development team.

As far as her participation in a home Games eight years from now, Farquharson said she “can’t rule it out,” though competing at 34 “feels like a big ask.

“It would definitely be a very cool full-circle moment for me.”

Reach USA TODAY Network sports reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com, and follow her on X @petitus25.

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The government entered a partial shutdown at midnight Friday after Congress failed to reach a funding deal — and some lawmakers’ decision to attend an international gathering in Europe this weekend is drawing criticism from colleagues on both sides of the aisle.

‘It’s absurd, I hope the American people are paying attention,’ Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., told Fox News Digital.

The deadline to fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) by the end of the week came with a built-in complication: members of both chambers were scheduled to attend the annual Munich Security Conference, with many set to depart by day’s end Thursday.

Without a deal in place, Congress left Washington, D.C., on Thursday after the Senate failed to pass both a full-year funding bill for DHS and a temporary, two-week funding extension.

At midnight Friday — with several lawmakers already in Germany — DHS shut down.

Both Republican leaders warned members to be prepared to return if a deal was reached. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., gave senators 24 hours’ notice to return, while House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., allowed a 48-hour window.

Despite the conference being scheduled months in advance, some lawmakers said leaving Washington — or even the country — during an active funding standoff sent the wrong message.

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., blamed Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., arguing that Democrats blocked Republican-led efforts to prevent a partial DHS shutdown.

‘Schumer’s what’s deciding this,’ Scott told Fox News Digital. ‘I mean, he’s deciding that he’s more interested in people going to Munich than he is in funding DHS.’

Several lawmakers from both chambers are attending the conference, participating in side discussions and panels during the annual forum, where heads of state and top decision-makers gather to debate international security policy.

Members of the House expressed frustration that senators would leave amid stalled negotiations between Senate Democrats and the White House.

‘The Senate started out a week ago saying, ‘I don’t think anybody should leave town,’’ Rep. Mark Amodei, R-Nev., told Fox News Digital. ‘Now they’re doing the Munich thing. At least [the House] sent a bill over…not a great pride moment for the federal government, is it?’

Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., led a bipartisan delegation of 11 senators to the conference.

When asked whether the shutdown would affect his travel plans, Whitehouse said, ‘I hope not.’

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., who was scheduled to participate in a panel with Graham titled ‘The State of Russia,’ according to the conference agenda, said lawmakers should have resolved outstanding issues before leaving town.

‘I’m not delighted with Republican resistance and unresponsiveness, but it’s on them at this point,’ Blumenthal said.

House rules prohibit official congressional delegations, also known as CODELs, during a shutdown. Still, several House members made the trip to Bavaria. At least a handful of House Democrats, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., attended the conference.

House Appropriations Committee Chair Tom Cole, R-Okla., said during a hearing on the impact of a DHS shutdown that it would be ‘unconscionable if Congress leaves and does not solve the problem.’

‘I’m sure Munich is a great place. I’ve been there many times. The beer is outstanding,’ Cole said. ‘But we don’t need to go to a defense conference someplace in Europe when we’re not taking care of the defense of the United States of America.’

Lawmakers are expected to continue negotiations throughout the weekend while many are abroad. Senate Democrats have signaled they may present a counteroffer to the White House but have not finalized a proposal.

If an agreement is reached, it would still take time to draft the legislative text and bring the measure to the Senate floor. Even so, some lawmakers argued that stepping away from negotiations — whether returning home or traveling overseas — was the wrong move.

‘I’ve been pretty outspoken to say we need to stay as long as we have to be here to be able to get things resolved so we don’t ever have a shutdown,’ Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., told Fox News Digital.

‘That’s the easiest way to resolve it is to say ‘no one walks away from the table,’’ he added. ‘We stay at the table.’

Rep. Joe Morelle, D-N.Y., told Fox News Digital the situation reflects poorly on GOP leadership’s handling of funding priorities, though he acknowledged the significance of the international conference.

‘There’s a certain irony that we would not be here to fund essential services of our government, but we have enough time and energy to go to the Munich Security Conference, which admittedly is a very important international gathering,’ Morelle said. ‘But I think it says a lot about the lack of leadership…we can’t do the fundamentals of this job.’

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., alleged at the Munich Security Conference on Friday that U.S. aid to the Jewish state enabled a genocide by Israel. AOC’s attack on the Jewish state in Munich unfolded in the birthplace of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi movement that carried out the worst genocide in human history.

AOC’s assault on Israel’s war campaign to defeat the U.S. and EU-designated terrorist movement Hamas in the Gaza Strip sparked outrage and intense criticism from academic military and Middle East experts.

During the town hall event in Munich, the Squad member said, ‘To me, this isn’t just about a presidential election. Personally, I think that the United States has an obligation to uphold its own laws, particularly the Leahy laws. And I think that personally, that the idea of completely unconditional aid, no matter what one does, does not make sense. I think it enabled a genocide in Gaza. And I think that we have thousands of women and children dead that don’t, that was completely avoidable.’

She continued, ‘And, so I believe that enforcement of our own laws through the Leahy laws, which requires conditioning aid in any circumstance, when you see gross human rights violations, is appropriate.’

The Leahy Laws prohibit the Department of Defense and the State Department from funding ‘foreign security force units when there is credible information that the unit has committed a ‘gross violation of human rights.’ Former Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-VT., introduced the bill in 1997.

Tom Gross, an expert on international affairs, told Fox News digital that ‘AOC has flown all the way to Munich — infamous as the city in which Hitler staged his Nazi Beer Hall Putsch that marked the beginning of the road to the Holocaust — in order to smear the Jewish people further with a phony genocide allegation.’

Gross added, ‘Such preposterous allegations of ‘genocide’ form the bedrock of modern antisemitic incitement against Jews in the U.S. and globally. This shocking ignorance and insensitivity by Ocasio-Cortez should rule her out of any potential presidential bid or other high office.’

Military experts and genocide researchers have debunked the allegation that Israel carried out a genocide against Palestinians during its self-defense war against the Hamas terrorist organization that started after Hamas terrorists attacked communities in parts of southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023 that saw over 1200 Israeli and foreign nationals killed and 251 brutally kidnapped and taken into Gaza by Hamas and other terrorists.

Danny Orbach, a military historian from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and co-author of ‘Debunking the Genocide Allegations: A Reexamination of the Israel-Hamas War from October 7 2023, to June 1, 2025,’ told Fox News Digital that Ocasio-Cortez accusation that Israel committed genocide is an ‘accusation that is incorrect both factually and legally. Under the Genocide Convention, genocide requires proof of a special intent to destroy a protected group, in whole or in part, and as a baseline condition, an active effort to maximize civilian destruction.

‘The evidence shows the opposite: as demonstrated in our multi-author study Debunking the Genocide Allegations, Israel undertook unprecedented measures to mitigate civilian harm, including establishing humanitarian safe zones that independently verified data show were approximately six times safer than other areas of Gaza.’

Orbach added, ‘Israel also issued detailed advance warnings before strikes and facilitated the entry of over two million tons of humanitarian aid, often at significant cost to its own military advantage, including the loss of surprise and the sustainment of an enemy during wartime.’

He concluded, ‘These measures were taken despite Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre, its systematic use of human shields and hospitals for military purposes, and a tunnel network exceeding 1,000 kilometers — an operational challenge without historical precedent. Finally, no credible evidence demonstrates the kind of unambiguous, exclusive genocidal intent toward Palestinians that international law requires and that cannot be reasonably interpreted otherwise.’

The conservative commentator Derek Hunter posted on X. ‘Imagine going to Germany to complain about a fake genocide by Jews…in Munich, of all places. @AOC is about as smart as clogged toilet.’

In Dec. 2024, Germany joined the U.S. in rejecting the allegations that Israel committed genocide in Gaza.

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Too often, watching the ladies on ABC’s ‘The View’ is like finding the five more partisan Democrat accounts on Instagram or X. You’ll get every Democratic National Committee talking point, with an emphasis on how the left is amazing and the right will end democracy as we know it.

This week, ‘The View’ crew repeatedly gushed over the allegedly marvelous Super Bowl halftime show of Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny, because he hates President Donald Trump and ICE. The fact that it was almost entirely in Spanish (except for a Lady Gaga interlude) was a point of pride and proved that Americans are backward people. ‘This country seems to be one of the only countries in the world that is so proud of being monolingual and not being able to communicate in more than one language,’ Co-host Sunny Hostin complained. ‘And, the fact of the matter is, in about 20 years, multi-ethnic people will be the majority in this country! So, if you don’t understand Spanish, maybe start taking a little Duolingo course!’

Co-host Joy Behar added disdain to the Bad Bunny critics: ‘These are not exactly the same people that go to the opera where they speak Italian and French. But let’s not go there. The country, in my opinion, has a misplaced set of values.’

Try to imagine Behar feeling morally superior as she goes to the Metropolitan Opera in New York to see the new woke version of Bizet’s ‘Carmen,’ where the setting is MAGA – ‘an industrial American town’ in flyover country – and the villains are ICE agents. Then it doesn’t matter if it’s in French.

The only hope in the coming weeks is that Alyssa Farah Griffin’s maternity leave results in a little more conservative dissent on this remarkably one-sided program. Already, fans of the show are up in arms that Elisabeth Hasselbeck is going to pop in, as if she was unacceptably ultraconservative in her decade on the show. It’s easier for the liberals to feel smart when nobody calls them out for sounding stupid.

On Thursday, after Attorney General Pam Bondi testified before Congress, Hostin accused Bondi of ruining the Department of Justice, which had supposedly never been a partisan agency under Democrat Presidents Bill Clinton or Barack Obama or Joe Biden. ‘The Justice Department is in shambles. So, the people of the United States have that person who is deeply unqualified, who is deeply unserious as their protection, as the person that is the chief law enforcement officer of the United States of America! I am so disgusted! I am so saddened by what is the destruction of one of the biggest and strongest institutions in our country!’ Nobody pushes back on these speeches.

Then Behar typically came unglued: ‘By the way, you know, just a little history, during the Watergate scandal President Nixon did not go to jail but John Mitchell did. John Mitchell was his attorney general. So, at the end of the day, Miss Bondi, you’re looking at some prison time.’ For what? Who needs to look it up? Emotion in search of an applause line is everything.

Minutes later, she played historian again, in the fight between Trump and Democrats in Congress like Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly, who nudged military personnel to defy Trump: ‘Again, I hate to bring up history again but there’s something called the Nuremberg defense, which basically states that acting under orders, illegal orders does not relieve a person of responsibility under international law.’ They always have to compare Trump to Hitler and his Nazi underlings.

She continued: ‘These people were saying, you do not have to obey an illegal order. And the illegal orders are the following,’ she said, reading from a paper. ‘Telling generals to send members into major cities to use them as training grounds. Suggesting that troops shoot protesters in the legs. Ordering unlawful military strikes on boats in international waters…. the Nuremberg Trial proved that going against an illegal order is legit.’

Nobody should want these ladies as their experts on history or politics or culture. But they are reliable robots on the social-media memes and themes that the Democrats use in their efforts to win every news cycle. It’s shocking that this show is under the ABC News umbrella, because there’s nothing in this show that sounds like journalism. 

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